Efrain Leonel Hernandez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 31, 2019
Docket04-18-00036-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Efrain Leonel Hernandez v. State (Efrain Leonel Hernandez v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Efrain Leonel Hernandez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas OPINION

No. 04-18-00036-CR

Efrain Leonel HERNANDEZ, Appellant

v.

The STATE of Texas, Appellee

From the 406th Judicial District Court, Webb County, Texas Trial Court No. 2016-CRN-000241-D4 Honorable Oscar J. Hale, Jr., Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Liza A. Rodriguez, Justice

Sitting: Luz Elena D. Chapa, Justice Beth Watkins, Justice Liza A. Rodriguez, Justice

Delivered and Filed: July 31, 2019

AFFIRMED

After a jury trial, Appellant Efrain Leonel Hernandez (“Hernandez”) was found guilty of

felony murder and sentenced to forty-five years of imprisonment. On appeal, he brings four issues:

(1) whether accomplice-witness testimony was corroborated by other evidence; (2) whether the

trial court abused its discretion in allowing inadmissible hearsay; (3) whether the trial court’s jury

charge contained error and Hernandez suffered egregious harm as a result; and (4) whether the

trial court abused its discretion in denying his motion for continuance. We affirm. 04-18-00036-CR

FACTS

On Saturday, November 14, 2015, Christopher Benavides was working as a security guard

and parking attendant at Rumors Country Bar (“Rumors”) in Laredo, Texas. Because he was

feeling sick from a cold, he decided to call his wife to pick him up. At about 10:30 p.m. that night,

his father, Hector Benavides Sr. (“Mr. Benavides”), arrived to work the parking lot with

Christopher. After 10:30 p.m., Christopher and his father began the process of charging people to

park by using cones to reserve parking spots. Christopher testified he and his father had sold a

couple of parking spots and needed to make change. As Christopher was leaving to get change, he

saw a dark pick-up truck enter the parking lot. A moment later, he heard a man “disrespecting [his]

father.” Christopher asked his father, “What’s this dude’s problem?” The man began reversing his

pick-up truck while “yapping his mouth.” In response, Christopher hit the truck on the driver’s

side. The man hit his brakes “hard” and opened the door to his truck. The man said, “Don’t be

hitting my f--king [truck].” The man then reached down to the “side pocket” of the truck’s door.

Because Christopher thought the man was reaching for a handgun, Christopher moved forward,

grabbed the door to the pick-up truck, and “opened it more.” Christopher testified he grabbed the

man’s arm and pulled his arm down to hold him. Christopher saw a woman sitting in the truck and

looked around for others. According to Christopher, the man “had tattoos,” was wearing “a blue

shirt,” and “was short.” Christopher testified he did not “get a good look at [the man’s] face

because [Christopher] was in shock looking for a weapon.” According to Christopher,

And then he kept trying to fight, telling me off. At that moment, I threw a punch at him and I punched him. . . . And when I punched him, he–with this hand he moved the truck that way and he threw the truck at me, so when he passed forward like that, I hit the back of his truck and he took off real slow. . . . He went around this way–yes–this way real slow. . . . So, I’m following him, walking behind the truck while he’s telling me off and telling me shit . . . . And then when he turns here, I cut through the cars here and he’s still telling me shit and I remember–like yeah, we were already heated and he was telling me off . . . and I just told him . . ., “Go ahead and f--k your mother you f--king short . . . midget.”

-2- 04-18-00036-CR

The man stopped, opened his door, and replied, “Follow me asshole. Follow me.” Christopher then

said, “Just get the f--k out of here. Get out of here.”

Christopher called his brother, Hector Benavides Jr., and told him about the incident.

According to Christopher, Hector said he would be there shortly. Christopher testified that when

his wife arrived to take him home, he was still feeling sick, but did not want to leave his father

alone. When his brother arrived, his father told him to go home, reassuring Christopher that his

brother was there and the bouncers for Rumors were also nearby at the front entrance. Christopher

left. A short while later, he received a phone call from his brother who was screaming that his

father had been “jumped” by some men and was severely beaten. Christopher raced back to

Rumors and saw the ambulance blocking the entrance. His father later died from his injuries.

The medical examiner testified that most of Mr. Benavides’s injuries were “mainly in the

head and in the face area.” “[T]here were some other injuries in the chest and hands and knees a

little bit, but the main area was the head.” Mr. Benavides had “raccoon eyes,” which was caused

by a skull fracture that led to internal bleeding. The top of Mr. Benavides’s chest had a “small”

“tube-type mark,” which the medical examiner concluded was caused by an object. Mr. Benavides

suffered from rib fractures, skull fractures, and internal bleeding. The medical examiner concluded

that Mr. Benavides died as a result of “multiple blunt force injuries and in the background of

preexisting cardiovascular disease or heart disease.”

Patrick Mendoza, a delivery driver for a pizza restaurant located in the same shopping plaza

as Rumors, testified he saw the attack on Christopher’s father. According to Mendoza, Mr.

Benavides was alone, sitting on a chair, when he got up to attend a car. After Mr. Benavides

finished with the car, Mendoza saw a “group of individuals” walk towards Mr. Benavides. Three

men approached Mr. Benavides while two men stayed back. Mendoza testified he felt uneasy

because the two men stared at him. According to Mendoza, the other three men surrounded Mr.

-3- 04-18-00036-CR

Benavides, and one of them yelled at Mr. Benavides, “Where’s the other one?” Mendoza then saw

one of the men “swing” at Mr. Benavides. Mendoza testified he saw this man clearly and described

the man as “kind of short,” “bald,” and “wearing a blue shirt.” However, Mendoza testified he

could not see the other two men clearly. The short man continued to hit Mr. Benavides

“aggressively.” Mr. Benavides tried to get away, but the man standing behind Mr. Benavides

grabbed his jacket and pulled him back behind the cars. Mendoza testified this man was taller than

the other two and was wearing a polo shirt, which Mendoza thought was white. As the men moved

behind the cars, Mendoza went back to the pizza restaurant to call the police. Mendoza testified

that the other two men were “just standing, watching” and did not seem upset. They did not try to

stop the attack. When Mendoza went back outside, he saw all five men running away. Mr.

Benavides was “gargling,” and there was blood underneath his mouth.

Mendoza was later shown a photo lineup by Investigator Anthony Carillo of the Laredo

Police Department. Mendoza identified Justin Hernandez, appellant’s brother, as the short man in

the blue shirt who first punched Mr. Benavides.

Leticia Ayala testified that she also saw the attack on Mr. Benavides. According to Ayala,

on November 14, 2015, she went to Rumors to meet a friend. She parked in an open spot as directed

by Mr. Benavides. Going through her purse, she realized she did not have any cash to pay for

parking. Mr. Benavides replied, “That’s fine, just give it to me in a moment.” He then walked

away. Ayala picked up her phone to text her friend that she was outside when she “started hearing

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